Well Gwen: You start off each day as a wet clingy fart and end up the same at the end of the day.
I discovered Rush in 1989, and listened to him almost every day until his tragic death. I even called and talked to him once, and a friend of mine recognized my voice. I really miss him.
I sure miss Rush, I had the opportunity to talk to him once.
“Because nothing he ever did had any value.” etc.
I remember when the conventional wisdom was that AM radio was a thing of the past, destined to just fade out.
Then somebody turned up on AM, changed the political dynamic and cultural battleground, and in the process revived the AM dial. When Gwen Carter Clements can point to a similar legacy, then she can lecture me about Rush Limbaugh.
Where I live, when the clock strikes noon, EVERYBODY THINKS ABOUT HIM and says a little prayer for him.
Every weekday, at the stroke of 12, I still think of tuning into the local AM station for 3 hours of broadcast excellence.
Hi, guarantee you that if you put together a string of comments from Rush, who is unfortunately dead, it will garner better ratings than anything this still-living idiot could ever possibly do. So much for him having had no positive effect on our culture.
A big part of me died that Feb 17 (btw my birthday) Have not listen to am radio since
You’d all be mad at Rush right now.
Do you know who Rush sai was the closest anyone had come to graduating from the Limbaugh Institute for Advance Conservative Studies? Hint: You’v espent the last several months attacking him and calling him a RINO.
They could play Rush’s show’s from the beginning and they still would be relevant and entertaining. He was a genius.
I niss him every day!
I first heard Rush on his first day of national syndication. For 30 years Rush Limbaugh was one of the few constants in my life.
One day an out town co-worker was at my office and heard Rush on the radio. He told me that his best friend was Tush’s producer.
“Yea right. Prove it. Get me an autographed photo.”
Sure enough, two days later I got a Fed Ex envelope. That photo is framed on the wall at my home office.
His passing was a day that shall live in infamy.
And people like Maddie, Kimmel, Fallon, and Lemon will be remembered? 🤣😂
His passing was a day that shall live in infamy.
And people like Maddie, Kimmel, Fallon, and Lemon will be remembered? 🤣😂
This sounds more accurate:
"...Thinking of Gwen Carter Clements and how when she is dead, you will never, ever hear anything about her. Nobody will ever mention anything she did. Because nothing she ever did had any value. It contributed nothing worthwhile to the culture. She just made anger. Every day. Rising, falling, then fading like a fart.
Then she will die and will be replaced by a fleet of little replicas, creating nothing of interest or artistic value to anyone. Seriously, what an awful way to make a living.
I think that will be FAR more accurate.
Dan Bongino mentioned Rush the other day on his radio show.
Let me tell you how I came to listen to Rush Limbaugh. I was an observer attending a NavAir test of the plane's electronics in an anechoic chamber. I was not privy to hearing what my friend, who was an instrumental part of the ongoing test, was hearing in his headset. Occasionally I would hear my friend chuckle, almost under his breath. Wondering how the test was going I finally asked; Joe, what are chuckling about? Joe covered his mouthpiece and said, " I'm listening to Rush Limbaugh".
My impression of Rush Limbaugh was that of a blowhard on the radio. However, my friend Joe is a Mensa member and is not likely to waste time listening to a blowhard. I started listening to Rush whenever I could and even recording some of his positions, which I thought were well presented. The blowhard remained but the information Rush shared was spot on.